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Amd ryzen 7 1800x displays their passmark score

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A verified entry from the AMD Ryzen 7 1800X has appeared in the PassMark database over the weekend. The system in question was submitted to PerformanceTest 9.0 to give us an idea of ​​its potential.

The results have been compiled and compared with the main rivals in the market for the new AMD processor, we are talking about the Core i7 6900K, i7 5960X, i7 6800K, i7 7700K and AMD FX 8350. The processors have worked at their stock speed and with a total of 16 GB of RAM together with the Windows 10 operating system except the i7 5960X and FX 8350, which are known to work with Windows 8.1 and Windows 8 respectively.

AMD Ryzen 7 1800X Single-Thread Performance

First, we have the PassMark PerformanceTest 9.0 single-core test that runs all processors with a single core and the maximum turbo frequency, below are the frequencies at which each processor worked:

R7 1800X: @ 4.1GHz (with XFR)

i7 7700K: @ 4.5GHz

i7 6900K: @ 4.0GHz (with Turbo Core 3.0)

i7 6800K: @ 3.8GHz (with Turbo Core 3.0)

i7 5960X: @ 3.5GHz

FX 8350: @ 4.2GHz

The Core i7-7700K uses its impressive turbo frequency to be the fastest processor in this test with a result of 2343 points, next is the Ryzen 7 1800X that is capable of reaching 2129 points so it does not stay either far away. Already behind we have the Core i7-6900K and the Core i7-5960X and at the end of everything we see the FX 8350 that shows the modest performance of the Piledriver cores, which have already been in the market for 5 years, everything is said.

This result shows the enormous leap forward that AMD Zen has made in terms of performance, we have gone from a microarchitecture that had nothing to do in single-wire to one that is capable of holding the type quite well before a processor that runs 400 MHz faster.

AMD Ryzen 7 1800X Multi-thread performance

Below we have a total of 8 multi-thread tests, the Ryzen 7 1800X has been able to be the fastest in 6 of them, it has only been beaten in the calculation of prime numbers and the synthetic test of physics. In both tests, the Ryzen 1800X has been passed with enough margin to finish behind the Core i7-6900K in the final result.

These two poor results may be due to a lack of test optimization with AMD's new microarchitecture, a problem that could be fixed later with the release of a patch and that could completely change the final score.

Source: wccftech

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